000 03954nam a22002777a 4500
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008 260408b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789361312809
_q(hardback)
082 _a294.50954 BLA
245 _aProvincialising pluralism:
_bDifference and diversity in South Asian traditions /
_cEdited by Brian Black, James Madaio
260 _aNew Delhi;
_bBloomsbury,
_c2026.
300 _avii, 530 pages;
_c25 cm.
365 _bRs. 2199.00
505 _aIntroduction: Brian Black and James Madaio - Part 1: Pluralisms in Ancient South Asia: Chapter 1: Claire Maes: '“I heard it through the grapevine.” Gossip and Rumour in the Pali Canon as Strategies to Deal with Religious Others' - Chapter 2: Sonam Kachru: 'Asoka's Principled Pluralism' - Chapter 3: Mark McClish: 'Pluralism and Religious Policy in the Arthasastra' - Chapter 4: Brian Black: 'The Mahabharata's Dharmic Pluralism' - Chapter 5: Vrinda Dalmiya: 'In Defence of Double-Think: Stances, Standpoints, and Justice in the Mahabharata and Feminist Epistemology' - Chapter 6: Jessica Frazier: 'Collaboration, Inference, and Virtue in the Caraka Samhita' - Chapter 7: Anil Mundra: 'Pluralistic Selves: Jain Engagements with Doctrinal Difference and Identity' - Chapter 8: Patrick Lambelet: 'Weaving Many into One: Plurality and Unity in the Buddhist Mantrayana' - Part 2: Pluralisms in Pre-Modern South Asia: Chapter 9: Nancy M. Martin: 'Forging Self and Sampraday: Inclusion, Equality, and Religious Diversity in Pre-Modern Bhakti' - Chapter 10: Pashaura Singh: 'Religious Pluralism and the Bhagat Bani in the Guru Granth Sahib' - Chapter 11: Jaroslav Strnad: 'Plurality of Spiritual Paths in the Dadupanthi Community of 17th Century Rajasthan' - Chapter 12: Rembert Lutjeharms: 'Encounters with the Inconceivable: Experience and Inclusivism in Early Gaudiya Vaisnava Theology' - Chapter 13: Rosie Edgley and Jacqueline Suthren Hirst: 'Addressing Plurality in Madhusudana Sarasvati's Bhagavadgita commentary' - Chapter 14: Supriya Gandhi: 'Reconciling Difference Through Tatbiq: Pluralism and Comparative Religion at the Mughal Court - Part 3: Pluralisms in Modern South Asia: Chapter 15: Scott R. Stroud: 'Ambedkar, Pragmatic Buddhism, and Democratic Pluralism' - Chapter 16: Elise Coquereau-Saouma: 'Witnessing and Realising Plurality in 20th Century Indian Philosophy' - Chapter 17: Arindam Chakrabarti: 'Seesaw Worlds, Interrogative Reality, and Alternative Theories of Error: From Kalidas Bhattacharya back to Abhinavagupta' - Chapter 18: James Madaio: 'Plurality and the Other in Ramchandra Gandhi's Hermeneutics of Being' - Chapter 19: Humeira Iqtidar: 'Is Tolerance Liberal? Javed Ahmed Ghamidi and the Non-Muslim Minority' - Chapter 20: Brian Black and James Madaio: 'Concluding Reflections: Thinking Pluralistically about Pluralism'.
520 _aAn authoritative exploration of South Asian ways of thinking about difference, diversity, and the other that encourages a significant change to how we understand pluralism. How have South Asian traditions responded to plurality and difference? The question lies at the centre of this collection, inviting us to challenge established conceptions of pluralism and understand South Asian ways of thinking about difference, diversity, and `the other'. This diverse collection is the first in-depth treatment of the variety of ways that South Asian traditions theorise plurality. Bringing together case studies across South Asia's distinctive religious landscape, it marks a significant contribution to re-thinking pluralism in the 21st century.
650 _aPhilosophy
650 _aEast Asian & Indian philosophy
650 _aBuddhism
650 _aHinduism
650 _aEast Asian religions
650 _aComparative politics
650 _aIndian sub-continent
700 _aBlack, Brian [Editor]
700 _aMadaid, James [Editor]
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c217925
_d217925